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Housing CounselDo You Have To Pay Closing Costs Again For That Refinance Loan?By: Benny L. Kass Q: I am shopping to refinance my existing condominium. It is worth approximately $400,000, and there is an outstanding loan balance of $160,000. My credit is stellar. In order to refinance with my current mortgage lender, they want $2,200 in closing costs. I just financed with this lender three years ago and there seems to be no special benefit for refinancing with this lender. I don't understand why they wouldn't want to keep a good customer and not charge me anything. Any insight? A: Keep shopping. You may be able to negotiate some of the closing fees with another lender. When you made application for that refinance loan, you should have received a “Good Faith Estimate” of all of the closing costs. Let’s look at the primary ones:
However, my experience is that in many cases, your existing lender may waive the appraisal requirement, since they know your property. Especially in your case, where there is considerable equity, you may be able to convince your current lender to waive the appraisal process.
I asked Jack Guttentag, the Mortgage Professor, this question, and here's his response: "You don't need a new owner's policy, but the lender will require you to purchase a new lender policy. Even if you refinance with the same lender, the existing lender's policy terminates when you pay off the mortgage. Furthermore, the lender is concerned about title issues that may have arisen since you purchased the property. A new title search will uncover any such issues, and you will have to pay it off as a condition for the refinance."
Everything in real estate is negotiable. Shop around carefully, ask as many questions as possible, and you should be able to save some money on your refinance. But since interest rates appear to be on the rise, don’t wait too long. – boilerplate–
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